Cathy Heycock

A research study by mental health charity SANE Australia reveals people affected by mental illness pay a high price when it comes to relationships and social contact, with the study showing half have no close relationship with another person.
The research, conducted between September and December 2008, focused on the emotional and physical relationships of people living with a mental illness, the consequences of this for their lives and what can be done about it.
The most disturbing result was the impact of mental illness on personal relationships, with lmost half having no friends, wanting to, yet struggling to connect with others. Physical intimacy, which includes hugging and touching others, was rare for many. In fact - astonishingly - almost one in six had not touched or been touched by another person for more than 12 months.
The study found the numbers of respondents who had: | |
| • No close relationship (General community with no close relationship | 49% 15%) |
| • Not touched or been touched by another person for 12 months | 13% |
| • No sexual contact in last 12 months | 35% |
SANE Australia Executive Director Barbara Hocking says extreme social isolation is known to damage mental health, yet it is something many people with mental illness have to endure.
"Not only are many people with mental illness dealing with their symptoms and associated problems such as poverty, they are leading isolated lives and often have no partner or even friends to share their lives," Ms Hocking said. This impedes their recovery.
"While governments are promoting social inclusion, these findings highlight the very real need for immediate, specific action to ensure such basic human needs for social contact are not being ignored."
Sexual health and intimacy also emerged as areas of concern for respondents: | |
| • Had not discussed the issue with their doctor or health worker | 50% |
| • Did not know enough about sexual health | 65% |
| • Not receiving routine health checks (e.g. pap tests, prostate checks) | 46% |
Ms Hocking says these figures reflect the general poor physical health care provided to people regarded all too often as solely "mental health patients."
The key recommendations of the report are:
SANE is calling on government agencies at all levels to improve opportunities for those affected to close relationships with others and improve their capacity for recovery.
Sane Australia SANE Research Bulletin 8:Intimacy and mental illness SANE 2009 Feb;issn 1832-8385 [Full text ()]
I was surprised at the results I found while searching for anxiety
treatment:
http://www.sweetsearch.com/search.html?q=anxiety+treatment
Good question, Kate. Especially given that buspirone (Buspar®) hasn't
exactly set the world on fire. Some with generalized anxiety have had good
results, others not so, and it appears to be mostly ineffective for all the
other anxiety disorders.